For those of you who aren’t familiar, DxOMark doesn’t just test out the sensors found inside full-blown cameras. There is a whole section of the website dedicated to mobile phone cameras, and while that section is rarely newsworthy from our perspective, this newest update is very interesting indeed.

The Nokia 808 PureView, a 41-megapixel beast, has been usurped by a camera that not only boasts less than half the resolution… but is actually somewhat unchanged from its previous iteration, the Z1.

If that last sentence is confusing you, you’re not alone. The fact is, the Z2 boasts the exact same camera as the Z1: a 20.7MP 1/2.3-inch CMOS sensor peering out at the world through a Sony G-type 27mm equivalent f/2.0 lens. Sony has simply managed to pull more performance out of the same hardware.

Here’s what DxOMark had to say about the phone’s performance:

In our industry-standard benchmarking tests, the revised Z2 impresses with its color and detail preservation, both outdoors and in more challenging lighting, and it retains the fast autofocus of the Z1 while improving its precision.

In reality, the phone ties with the 808 in the stills section with a score of 81, but its ability to shoot 4K video puts it two points above the Nokia at 77 in the overall rankings — a new top score among mobile phones.

No, it won’t compete with a serious camera (although, to be fair, the Lumia 1020 held its own against some stiff P&S competition when DxOMark tested it as a dedicated camera earlier this year), but if you’re looking for the best camera phone money can buy, the Experia Z2 looks like your best bet… and hey, it’s waterproof too!